Somebody has to keep the power transmision lines from hydro and roads open for natives, miners, weirdo off griders and tree poachers.The only access to many communities.
Somebody has to keep the power transmision lines from hydro and roads open for natives, miners, weirdo off griders and tree poachers.The only access to many communities.
Once upon a time, the logging companies did that themselves. Now, some FSRs are "maintained" by highways, some by logging companies that use them, some by MoF, and most not at all. And we have a few querky ones on the Island that as far as I know don't exist anywhere else. We have highways that off highway logging tucks use. Nice wide lanes to accomadate 14 ft wide trucks. Top of Gibsons mountain to Pt Alice, and Gold River townsite to the ocean. Kemano, which is really odd, because the only thing there is the power generation for Kitamat smelter, which has a crew of about 12 in camp. About 13 km from the dock to camp.Somebody has to keep the power transmision lines from hydro and roads open for natives, miners, weirdo off griders and tree poachers.
Good sources for dead fall firewood.Once upon a time, the logging companies did that themselves. Now, some FSRs are "maintained" by highways, some by logging companies that use them, some by MoF, and most not at all. And we have a few querky ones on the Island that as far as I know don't exist anywhere else. We have highways that off highway logging tucks use. Nice wide lanes to accomadate 14 ft wide trucks. Top of Gibsons mountain to Pt Alice, and Gold River townsite to the ocean. Kemano, which is really odd, because the only thing there is the power generation for Kitamat smelter, which has a crew of about 12 in camp. About 13 km from the dock to camp.
Long time since there , North Island was a forgotten Eden , sounds like that is changing .20 minute wheelchair accessable trail. That was done in the 80s sometime. It has been probably 20 years in between trips.
KatimavikLong time since there , North Island was a forgotten Eden , sounds like that is changing .
Pt Hardy really went for a shit after the mine closed. Finally got a decent Coast Guard station. Lots of government offices, mostly staffed by people with social work degrees telling the rest of the survivors how they should become self employed. I was up there for several daays about this time last year repairing the old Robert Scott School. It is now about half daycare and half social worker offices. Seagate is gone. The pub is now storage. Tbird pub is a church, but the hotel part is still running.Long time since there , North Island was a forgotten Eden , sounds like that is changing .
Wow the Seagate was like home for three months and when not there at the TBird . Some changes are not for the better . Can’t remember the name but there used to be a lounge on the hill up from Seagate .Pt Hardy really went for a shit after the mine closed. Finally got a decent Coast Guard station. Lots of government offices, mostly staffed by people with social work degrees telling the rest of the survivors how they should become self employed. I was up there for several daays about this time last year repairing the old Robert Scott School. It is now about half daycare and half social worker offices. Seagate is gone. The pub is now storage. Tbird pub is a church, but the hotel part is still running.
That would be Seagate pub, if you mean right above the old part of the hotel. There is North Shore, just across from carrot park.Wow the Seagate was like home for three months and when not there at the TBird . Some changes are not for the better . Can’t remember the name but there used to be a lounge on the hill up from Seagate .
I think it must have been North Shore . It was not the Seagate Pub it was on a side road looking east over the park and Seagate wharf .That would be Seagate pub, if you mean right above the old part of the hotel. There is North Shore, just across from carrot park.
Good for you to get out and participate in what must be fabulous country. Some day maybe for me. I did make Kitimat and Port Rupert 6 or so years ago.For you maybe. We regularly drive shit roads, pack loads, tow a boat, etc. We have a newish truck for this, a 30 yr old truck that I use for work, use it to launch in salt water as well. A 23 yr old awd beater with a heater(most of the time) that I use for running around with the hairball, and a near new Prius halfbreed awd for basic running around and sometimes day trips with no dog.
Last summer we took a trip to SanJosph Bay, which is about 5 hrs from here. The last 40 or so miles is logging road. Used to be a nice localish beach when I lived in Pt Hardy. If there were a dozen people on the beachit was considered busy and you probably knew half of them If not, you would by the end of the day. Las summer there were about a hundred vehicles in the parking lot, which is about a km closer to the beach and 10 times the size it used to be, and on the road. Lots of city SUVs, and the people that drive them clearly believe the commercials for their toys. They were pounding through potholes, passing my 1 ton truck like we were standing still. Never buy a used SUV at the Vancouver car auction.
And mosquitoes, don’t forget them .Good for you to get out and participate in what must be fabulous country. Some day maybe for me. I did make Kitimat and Port Rupert 6 or so years ago.
We're good here in NW Ontario with pretty well nothing but lakes to explore and play. Lots of near to surface Canadian Shield with plenty of outcrops for the geology buffs. And logging roads that go forever.
Could be the age demographic only driving a few times a week that has me thinking cars are being used less as well.
I'll bring some extra, in case you do.And mosquitoes, don’t forget them .
The Trudeau government’s EV strategy expressed a legitimate ambition, but it does not appear to have weighed seriously the prospect that EV demand was not inevitably going to be governed by hockey stick economics — that is, slow growth followed by a sudden, sharp and sustained increase. Trudeau’s imprudence was apparent in the whopping nature of the subsidies.On the same day Prime Minister Mark Carney confirmed that François-Philippe Champagne was his permanent choice for finance minister, news broke showing precisely why he’s the wrong man for the job.
Wednesday’s report from the financial news site Nikkei Asia that Honda has suspended its plan to build a $15-billion electric vehicle plant in Ontario indefinitely comes as no surprise — particularly not to the federal government, which was told in January, sources say.Champagne was the man who captained former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s electric vehicle (EV) crusade. He teamed up with the government of Ontario to give over $50 billion of taxpayer cash to the EV industry to try to get electric cars and factories built in Canada.
Adam Chambers, the Conservative international trade critic, told reporters on Wednesday that the subsidies on offer by Ottawa induced some manufacturers to move traditional vehicle production outside of Canada to make room for subsidized electric vehiclesThe crown jewel “investment” Champagne secured was from Honda. In April 2024, Honda announced plans to invest $15 billion to retool a factory to build EVs, as well as build a new EV battery plant, in Alliston, Ontario.
Experts say no shit Sherlock .The Trudeau government’s EV strategy expressed a legitimate ambition, but it does not appear to have weighed seriously the prospect that EV demand was not inevitably going to be governed by hockey stick economics — that is, slow growth followed by a sudden, sharp and sustained increase. Trudeau’s imprudence was apparent in the whopping nature of the subsidies.
Wednesday’s report from the financial news site Nikkei Asia that Honda has suspended its plan to build a $15-billion electric vehicle plant in Ontario indefinitely comes as no surprise — particularly not to the federal government, which was told in January, sources say.
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Carney says 'challenges' face auto sector after Honda reportedly pulls out of EV plant in Ontario — National Post
The plant in Alliston, Ont., was supposed to become operational in 2028 and would have produced up to 240,000 EVs annuallyapple.news
Adam Chambers, the Conservative international trade critic, told reporters on Wednesday that the subsidies on offer by Ottawa induced some manufacturers to move traditional vehicle production outside of Canada to make room for subsidized electric vehicles, and now the market isn’t there for them. “Instead of rethinking their entire policy, they (Liberals) are doubling down,” he said. “You saw last night, the Japanese ambassador suggesting that access to the U.S. market for automakers is integral to having production here. If we don’t have access to the U.S. market, we do not have an industry.”
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John Ivison: Trudeau’s big EV bet is officially a flop — National Post
Without Biden, the Canadian EV policy made little sense. It makes even less sense when Canadian exports to the U.S. are hit by tariffsapple.news
“What we think is that, from a government perspective, they found an agreement between the Canadian government and the Chinese government, [so] there will be also an agreement between the U.S. government and the Chinese government,” says Trantini.“You saw last night, the Japanese ambassador suggesting that access to the U.S. market for automakers is integral to having production here. If we don’t have access to the U.S. market, we do not have an industry.”